Emmerson v. Marvel

55 Ind. 265
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 55 Ind. 265 (Emmerson v. Marvel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emmerson v. Marvel, 55 Ind. 265 (Ind. 1876).

Opinion

Perkins, J.

Complaint for slander. Answer, general denial. Trial. Verdict for the plaintiff, for three hundred and fifty-four dollars. Motion in arrest of judgment, overruled. Exceptions, and judgment on the verdict. No bill of exceptions. The motion in arrest is substantially as follows:

1st. The complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action;

2d. It does not show a speaking of the words within the State of Indiana;

8d. It does not show the speaking of the words within the presence or hearing of any person;

4th. It does not allege that the words spoken were ever published; and,

5th. It does not allege the speaking of the words in the presence or hearing of any person having knowledge of their alleged provincial meaning, or that they were spoken by the defendant in their alleged provincial sense.

The ease is brought to this court upon the alleged error in overruling the motion in arrest of judgment, and [267]*267presents the single question, is the complaint in the cause good on such motion ?

It will be proper to set forth the complaint in this opinion. It is as follows:

“Abigail Marvel, plaintiff', an infant, by her next friend, "Wesley Marvel, whose written consent thereto is herewith filed, complains of Josephus Emmerson, defendant, and says that she, the plaintiff, Abigail, is an unmarried female, and is and always has been a person of good character, and honest and chaste in all her deportment, and, until the committing of the grievances by the defendant, hereinafter set forth, the plaintiff’ had never been suspected of the crime of fornication, or any other disgraceful, lascivious or unchaste act; yet the defendant, well knowing the premises, but maliciously intending to ruin the plaintiff’s fair name and reputation, and bring her into public infamy, disgrace and scandal, on the — day of September, 1872, spoke of and concerning the plaintiff the following false, defamatory and slanderous words : that is to say; £ She 3 [the plaintiff’, Abigail, meaning] £ was getting fat; some one had slipped up on the blind side of her,’ [the plaintiff’ meaning] and meaning then and thereby, and by the use of said words, to charge the plaintiff with formication, and with being pregnant with a bastard child. And again: £ She3 [the plaintiff, Abigail, meaning] £ was getting fat,3 (meaning that the plaintiff’ had been guilty of fornication, and that she was then pregnant with a bastard child); £ some one had slipped up on the blind side of her,3 [the plaintiff meaning, and meaning that some man had had illicit, carnal intercourse with the plaintiff']. And plaintiff avers that the defendant intended, by the use of said words, to charge the plaintiff’ with fornication, whoredom, and with having had carnal intercourse with some man, and that she was, at the time of the uttering of said words, pregnant with a bastard child. And said plaintiff avers that said words, when taken together, at the time and place where said words were used by the defendant, had a [268]*268provincial meaning, viz., that the female of whom they should be spoken had been guilty of fornication, and was pregnant with a bastard child. "Wherefore,” etc.

We may observe, at this point, that it is not generally necessary to the sufficiency of a complaint for slander that it should aver a speaking of the words within the State in which the suit is brought. The action for slander is transitory. Offutt v. Earlywine, 4 Blackf. 460; Linville v. Earlywine, 4 Blackf 469.

In considering as to the sufficiency of the complaint, the first question decided may properly be, are the words alleged to have been spoken by the defendant, of the plaintiff, viz., “She was getting fat; some one had slipped up on the blind side of her,” actionable per se ? Eor if they are, the complaint is sufficient, notwithstanding its failure to show that the words were spoken in the presence and hearing of a third person. Shinloub v. Ammerman, 7 Ind. 347; Guard v. Risk, 11 Ind. 156.

'We do not,think the words actionable per se, throughout the country generally.

This being so, the next question is, does the complaint show, by the requisite allegations, that the words were spoken in an actionable sense, in this particular case.

This might be shown in one or both of two modes.

1st. By allegations in the complaint making it appear that, in this particular instance, they were used in an actionable sense, in a part of the State where they were not actionable per se. The words are of that character that renders them capable of being used with an actionable meaning. ' Waugh v. Waugh, 47 Ind. 580.

2d. By averments m the complaint, that, in the locality where they were used, the actionable meaning had become the common meaning, so that, in that locality, the words were actionable per se.

The complaint consists of a single paragraph, and it does not contain the necessary requisites to show an actionable speaking, according to the first inode men[269]*269tioned. The colloquium is absent. Schurick v. Kollman, 50 Ind. 336. Where an inducement or colloquium and innuendo were required by the common law in a declaration, they are required under the code in a complaint, so far as relates to the subject-matter. See note to Harper v. Delp, 3 Ind., on page 234. It is not necessary that we should, in this opinion, particularize as to when a part or all of these special allegations should appear in the complaint. The subject is familiar to the lawyer. The text-books on pleading and practice treat of it minutely. Our own reports abound with cases illustrating it. An early ease is Linville v. Earlywine, supra. Late cases are Lipprant v. Lipprant, 52 Ind. 273, and Spahr v. Nicklaus, 51 Ind 221.

As the point in regard to publication of the slanderous words is made on the motion in arrest, we may observe that where the words charged in the complaint are actionable per se, it is not necessary to its sufficiency, as has been shown above, that it should contain an allegation that the words were spoken in the presence of some third person, though such fact would have to be proved on the trial; yet where the words are not actionable per se, and a colloquium, etc., is required to appear in the complaint, such colloquium will necessarily disclose the fact of the publication of the words to third persons.

We proceed to the second mode mentioned of showing the actionable character of the charge, viz., -by averring a provincial, that is, an actionable local meaning in the place where spoken. Are the averments in the complaint sufficient for this purpose ? We bring together the parts of the complaint bearing on this point, thus: The defendant, on the — day of September, 1872, spoke of the plaintiff the following defamatory words: “ ‘ She was getting fat; some one had slipped up on the blind side of herand the’ plaintiff avers that said words, when taken together, at the time and place where said words were [270]*270used by the defendant, had a provincial meaning, to wit, that the female of whom they should be spoken had been guilty of fornication, and was pregnant with a bastard child.”

The complaint was filed in the Gibson circuit court, Gibson county, Indiana.

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Bluebook (online)
55 Ind. 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emmerson-v-marvel-ind-1876.